Prague as a Living History

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Prague as a Living History Syllabus of the course Fall 2017 Lecturers: Ondrej Skripnik, Pavel Soukup, Jaroslav Svátek Tuesday 2 pm 5 pm Wednesday 2 pm 5 pm Thursday 10 am 1 pm Basic reading: Petr ČORNEJ, Great Stories in Czech History, Praha 2005, pp. 1-142. Václav CÍLEK, Prague Between History and Dreams, Bloomington 2004, pp. 3-53. Please read early in the semester! Further reading: Hugh AGNEW, The Czechs and the Lands of Bohemian Crown, Stanford 2004, pp. 1-101. Week 1 Introductory CEE Lectures Week 2 How Statues Speak: Charles Bridge and Beyond Reading[A]: 1. Václav CÍLEK, Prague Between History and Dreams, Bloomington 2004, pp. 3-8, 32-33. 2. Alena JEŽKOVÁ, Saint John of Nepomuk, in: Czech Heaven, Prague 2012, pp. 59-67. Week 3 The Castle: Power and defense, security and luxury Reading [B]: 1. Petr ČORNEJ, Great Stories in Czech History, Praha 2005, pp. 16-24. 2. Zdeněk LUKEŠ, Transformation of Prague Castle: From a Feudal Residence to the Headquarters of a Democratic State, in: The Story of Prague Castle, Prague 2003, pp. 446-57 St Vitus Cathedral (Katedrála sv. Víta) Queen Anne s Summerhouse Belvedere (Letohrádek královny Anny)

Old Royal Palace [from outside] (Starý královský palác) Week 4 Vyšehrad Castle: Legends and memory Reading [C]: 1. Petr ČORNEJ, Great Stories in Czech History, Praha 2005, pp. 7-15. 2. Cosmas of Prague, The Chronicle of the Czechs, transl. Lisa Wolverton, Washington 2009, pp. 38-52. Church of St. Peter and Paul (Chrám sv. Petra a Pavla) Vyšehrad Cemetery (Vyšehradský hřbitov, Slavín) Week 5 Baroque Devotion in the Landscape: Loreto and the Infant Jesus Reading[F]: 1. Petr ČORNEJ, Great Stories in Czech History, Praha 2005, pp. 71-88. 2. Josef PETRÁŇ, Baroque Culture and Society in Bohemia, in: The Glory of the Baroque in Bohemia, ed. Vít Vlnas, Prague 2001, pp. 61-77. Church of Our Lady Victorious (Pražské Jezulátko) The Loreto (Loreta) Week 6 Medieval Town of Prague: Prosperity and revolution Reading[D]: 1. Václav CÍLEK, Prague Between History and Dreams, Bloomington 2004, pp. 52-53. 2. Lewis MUMFORD, The Monastery and the Clock, in: The City Cultures Reader, ed. M. Miles, T. Hall, I. Borden, London New York 2000, pp. 120-124. 3. Petr ČORNEJ, Great Stories in Czech History, Praha 2005, pp. 44-52. Bethlehem Chapel (Betlémská kaple) The Astronomical Clock at the Old Town Hall (Staroměský orloj) The Týn Yard (Ungelt) and the Church of our Lady (Týnský chrám) Week 7 Prague as Heavenly Jerusalem: The New Town of Charles IV Reading[E]: 1. Paul CROSSLEY Zoë OPAČIĆ, Prague as a New Capital, in: Prague: The Crown of Bohemia, 1347-1437, eds. Barbara Drake Boehm and Jiří Fajt, New York 2005, pp. 59-66.

2. Autobiography of Emperor Charles IV, ed. Balász NAGY, Frank SCHAER, Paul W. KNOLL, Budapest 2001, pp. 43-47, 59-71. The Church of St Charlemagne (Karlov) The Slavonic Monastery Emmaus (Klášter Na Slovanech, Emauzy) Week 8 Midterm - Required reading: Petr Čornej, Great Stories in Czech History, Praha 2005, pp. 1-89. +The City Made of Paper: Municipal Museum and Langweil s Model of Prague Week 9 Expanding the City: Vinohrady Hundred Years Ago Reading[G]: 1. Petr ČORNEJ, Great Stories in Czech History, Praha 2005, pp. 98-106. 2. Jaroslav HAŠEK, The good soldier Švejk and his fortunes in the World War, transl. Cecil Parrott, London 1974, pp. 3-23. The Art Nouveau in Prague St Wenceslas Church in Vršovice (Kostel sv. Václava) (Czech student) Week 10 Prefab Housing: Prague s suburbs in the era of Real Socialism Reading[H]: 1. Petr ČORNEJ, Great Stories in Czech History, Praha 2005, pp. 125-133. 2. Kimberly Elman ZARECOR, Socialist Neighborhoods after Socialism: The Past, Present, and Future of Postwar Housing in the Czech Republic, East European Politics and Societies 26 (2012), pp. 486-495. Palace of Culture (now Prague Congress Centre) Prague Metro Week 11 Modern Architecture: from Art Nouveau to the Dancing House Reading[I]: 1. Derek SAYER, The Coasts of Bohemia, Princeton 1998, pp. 195-202 (chapter Modernism and Modernities: The International Style ). 2. Dancing Building, ed. Irena Fialová, Prague: Zlatý řez 2003 (parts). 3. Zlatý Anděl. Jean Nouvel in Prague, ed. Irena Fialová, Prague: Zlatý řez 2000 (parts).

The old and the new building of the National Theatre (Národní divadlo, Nová scéna) The Dancing House (Tančící dům) Week 12 Prague s Present and Future (classroom presentation) Karlín: Transformation of a Neighborhood Week 13 Final Test, Evaluation, Closing Discussion GRADING POLICY: 20% - presentation; 40% - tests; 40% - essay

GUIDELINES: Required reading For each walking tour, please read the texts listed above. It is also useful to go through the reading recommended for the given period (see below), especially for those presenting papers. On-site presentation - length: ca. 5 minutes - address especially following questions: When was the monument (historical building, church etc.) built? To which architectural style does it belong? What other events in its history are worth mentioning? What do you personally find interesting about the site? - It is recommended to visit the site in advance. - Preference is given to speaking, not reading the presentation. NB. Please e-mail your notes or the outline of your paper to the respective professor in advance. Midterm test - tests students orientation in pre-modern Central-European/Czech history gained from Petr Čornej, Great Stories in Czech History Final Test - a multiple choice test focusing on Czech/Prague history and architectural styles; the test sheet contains images - to prepare for the test, please review the required readings and the PowerPoint presentation of styles & chronology Final essay - choose a chapter/article from Recommended reading (below) dealing with a period that appealed to you - summarize and comment the reading and explain what you find interesting about the period/event/style/site etc.; try to find connections to what you were able to see in Prague with your own eyes - search for other Prague buildings and historical sites from the same period, that we did not visit on walking tours; take pictures of those sites (whole and/or detail), include those pictures in your essay and comment on them extensively - indicate all used sources in footnotes or in the bibliography - length: ca. 1200 words / 6 images; form: electronic (e.g. pdf, doc) NB. Please e-mail the essay to the respective professor by the end of the Final Exam Week at the latest.

RECOMMENDED READING: Early Origins: Mythology and Romanesque Art - Peter DEMETZ, Libussa, or Versions of Origin, in: Prague in Black and Gold: The history of a city, Penguin Books, 1998, pp. 3-5, 16-29 - COSMAS OF PRAGUE, The Chronicle of the Czechs, transl. Lisa WOLVERTON, Washington 2009, pp. 38-52 Middle Ages I: Gothic Prague and Charles IV - Paul CROSSLEY Zoë OPAČIĆ, Prague as a New Capital, in: Prague: The Crown of Bohemia, 1347-1437, eds. Barbara Drake Boehm and Jiří Fajt, New York New Haven London 2005, p. 59-73. - Lewis MUMFORD, Protection and the Medieval Town, in: idem, The Culture of Cities, Westport 1970, pp. 13-17, 27-35, 51-58 - Lewis MUMFORD, The Monastery and the Clock, in: The City Cultures Reader, ed. M. Miles, T. Hall, I. Borden, London New York 2000, pp. 120-124 Middle Ages II: Hussites and Early Reformation in Prague - František ŠMAHEL, The Hussite movement: an anomaly of European history?, in: Bohemia in History, ed. Mikuláš Teich, Cambridge University Press 1998, pp. 79-97. Trans-Alpine Renaissance and Rudolf II - R. J. W. EVANS, Prague Mannerism and the Magic Universe, in: idem, Rudolf II and His World. A study in intellectual history, 1576-1612, Oxford 1973 pp. 243-274 Counter-Reformation and Baroque Culture - Josef PETRÁŇ, Baroque Culture and Society in Bohemia, in: The Glory of the Baroque in Bohemia. Essays on art, culture and society in the 17th and 18th centuries, ed. Vít Vlnas, Prague: National Gallery 2001, pp. 61-77. - Robert BIRELEY, Refashioning of Catholicism, 1450 1700, New York 1999, pp. 107-120 National Revival and Nineteenth-century Historicism - Vladimír MACURA, Problems and paradoxes of the national revival, in: Bohemia in History, ed. Mikuláš Teich, Cambridge University Press 1998, pp. 182-197. - Otto URBAN, Czech society 1848-1918, in: Bohemia in History, ed. Mikuláš Teich, Cambridge University Press 1998, pp. 198-214. - Garry B. COHEN, The Politics of Ethnic Survival: Germans in Prague, 1861-1914, Princeton, NJ 1981 (Introduction; Conclusion: Ethnic Identity, Group Solidarity, and Historical Change, p. 3-18, 274-282) - Derek SAYER, The Coasts of Bohemia, Princeton 1998, pp. 141-147 (chapter A Discovery in Dvůr Králové ), pp. 176-184 (chapter The Completion of Saint Vitus s ), pp. 98-107 (chapter Little Golden Chapel on the Vltava ) Modern Styles (Art Nouveau, Cubism, Functionalism) - Derek SAYER, The Coasts of Bohemia, Princeton 1998, pp. 195-208 (chapter Modernism and Modernities. International Style ) - Otto URBAN, Czech society 1848-1918, in: Bohemia in History, ed. Mikuláš Teich, Cambridge University Press 1998, pp. 198-214.

- Garry B. COHEN, The Politics of Ethnic Survival: Germans in Prague, 1861-1914, Princeton, NJ 1981 (Introduction; Conclusion: Ethnic Identity, Group Solidarity, and Historical Change, p. 3-18, 274-282) Socialist and Contemporary Architecture - Peter LIZON, East Central Europe: The Unhappy Heritage of Communist Mass Housing, Journal of Architectural Education 50 (1996), pp. 104-114. - Zlatý Anděl. Jean Nouvel in Prague, ed. Irena Fialová, Prague: Zlatý řez 2000 + Dancing Building, ed. Irena Fialová, Prague: Zlatý řez 2003 FURTHER READING: - Tomáš RYGL, Prague. Detailed Picture Guide,Praha : ATP 2007, 154 p. - Hugh AGNEW, The Czechs and the Lands of Bohemian Crown, Stanford 2004. - Angelo Maria RIPELLINO, Magic Prague, London : Picador, 1995, 333 p. - Peter DEMETZ, Prague in Black and Gold: The history of a city, Penguin Books, 1998, 411p. - Vladislav DUDÁK, Prague Pilgrim, or Prague from every side, Praha : Baset, 1995, 203 p. - Mikuláš TEICH (ed.), Bohemia in History, Cambridge University Press 1998, 398 p. - Petr ČORNEJ Jiří POKORNÝ, A brief history of the Czech lands to 2000, Praha : Práh, 2000, 94 p. - Josef V. POLIŠENSKÝ, History of Czechoslovakia in Outline, Praha: Bohemia International, 1991, 144 p.